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Girl - My Number (CD)

My Number
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5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: My Number

Release Date:05/06/2003
Label:Castle Music Uk
UPC:5050159136322

Track List: My Number

Disk 2

  1. Mad for It
  2. Green Light
  3. King Rat
  4. You Really Got Me [Demo Version]
  5. Ice in the Blood [Live]
  1. Big Night [Live]
  2. Sweet Kids [Live]
  3. Nice 'N' Nasty [Live]
  4. Thru the Twilite [Live]
  5. Family at War [Live]

Other Available Formats: My Number

User Reviews: My Number

  • Overall:

    GIRL ANTHOLOGY

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Oct 29, 2002

    After 2 decades finally all the best that GIRL had to offer has been put onto a box set CD collection. Sanctuary Music are very good at doing this stuff, they worked hard to unearth the complete collection. I dug thru (the twilite) my attic to come u...p with great photo's and stuff, we found some old demo's and it's all here...I do believe some of the live material to be a little lacking 9to put it mildly) but it is incredible the amount of interest GIRL still generates. Of course Phil Collen is still doing albums and touring with Def Leppard, as is Philip Lewis with the LA Guns, I gathered a few new friends with my 3 years touring and recording with John Taylor (has has noe reformed Duran Duran)...if you were into GIRL, forget the other CD's and get this..it's aall you'll need, for musical choice, photo's and history...if you want any further info, or to claim we stole your riff's (as 1 recent email claimed) you can contact me on my website www.laffylines.com I will be happy to oblige if i can...Good listening. GERRY LAFFY (founder member of GIRL) 2002 Read more Less

Pro Reviews: My Number

  • All Music Guide

    Starcrossed from the start, Londonbased, wannabe glam rock legends Girl were caught between the proverbial rock and a hard place of, respectively, late70s punk and early80s heavy metal. And even though their commercial failures would eventually be given the benefit of retrospective reevaluation, when two of their members guitarist Phil Collen of later Def Leppard fame, and vocalist Philip Lewis of future L.A. Guns infamy made it big with subsequent bands, this comprehensive, twodisc anthology tends to corroborate the harsh reality that Girl just weren't very good in the first place. Then again, some may rightly argue that most glam rock is about posturing as much as music, in which case Girl were a roaring success simply for believing their own hype, and, in the process, convincing at least one country (Japan, naturally) to do the same. In any case, Castle's 37track, 2002released anthology, My Number, does a more than apt job of registering the quintet's barely threeyears of existenc...e, leaving few stones unturned and shining powerful spotlights upon the wildly uneven qualities of Girl's output. This becomes immediately evident as disc one begins to unfold: alternating astonishingly good efforts like the fey stomper "My Number," the flawlessly flirtatious "Little Miss Anne," and a positively electrifying "Hollywood Tease" (later famously recut for L.A. Guns's excellent debut), with unconvincing party anthems ("Lovely Lorraine," "Nice ‘n' Nasty"), lagging plodrockers ("The Things that You Say"), lyrically unfinishedsounding numbers ("Thru the Twilight," the Def Leppardlike "Heartbreak America"), characterless cover versions (Kiss' "Do You Love Me," The KinksbywayofVan Halen's "You Really Got Me"), and even misguided deviations into subPolice white boy ska ("Old Dogs," "Passing Clouds"). By the time the disc is winding down, we're deep into the group's second album, where inconsistency has given way to mild derivativeness in the shape of the Aerosmithlite of "19" and "Overnight Angels"' recycling of Saxon's "Strong Arm of the Law." But, of far greater interest, disc number two shifts the focus to unreleased recordings for what should have been the group's never released third album, and, surprise, surprise, many of the nine tracks on offer display greater maturity and poise than most everything that came before. "Naughty Boy" and "Killing Time" are both unassuming but effective hard rockers, "Big Night Out" and "Green Light" blast off with unprecedented zeal, and even the colder new wave sheen of "The Sound of Cars" is, at the very least, distinctive. Needless to say, it is these long lost tracks along with six, hardly aweinspiring, but no doubt collectable live performances, that will appease any true Girl believers out there, as well as the merely curious glam rock fan looking for a broad and definitive glimpse of Girl's modest contributions to the genre this be it. - Eduardo Rivadavia, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Girl

Thought they never found mainstream success, London-based quintet Girl provided a tenuous link between the '70s glam movement, and its heavier, but no-less-sleazy late-'80s counterpart. Their brief existence and uneven output notwithstanding, the group is now best-remembered as the starting point for some illustrious musicians who would go on to greater fame and fortune... Read more